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Project Management Systems

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1 Project Management Systems
Week 3, LSBM, Sept 2015

2 Outline Recap Project Management Systems

3 What is Project Management?
Project Management is the process of defining, Planning ,organizing, leading and controlling the development of an unique product. The goal of Project Management is to deliver an unique product that is acceptable to Users and is developed on time and within budget

4 Project Management Systems
They are the collective processes and procedures including Project Information Support (PMIS) Integration of human and material resources to achieve successful projects. PMB-WK3 4/25/2018

5 PROJECT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM PHASES
INITIATING THE PROJECT PLANNING THE PROJECT EXECUTING THE PROJECT CLOSING DOWN THE PROJECT

6 1. PROJECT INITIATION The first phase of Project Management
Process in which activities are performed to asses the Size, Scope, and Complexity of the Project and to establish procedures to support later Project activities.

7 PROJECT INITIATION ACTIVITIES
ESTABLISHING THE PROJECT INITIATION TEAM ESTABLISHING A RELATIONSHIP WITH CUSTOMER ESTABLISHING PROJECT INITIATION PLAN ESTABLISHING MANAGEMENT PROCEDURES ESTABLISH PROJECT MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENT AND PROJECT WORKBOOK Depending on the Project some of these Initial Activities may be unnecessary and some may be very involved.

8 2. PROJECT PLANNING The Project Planning provides an overall framework for managing Project Costs and schedules. Project Planning involves defining clear, discrete “Activities” or “Tasks” and the work needed to complete each Activity. Activities are the basic units of work that Project Manager Plans, monitors so Activities should be relatively small and manageable. IF YOU FAIL TO PLAN, YOU PLAN TO FAIL!

9 2. PROJECT PLANNING ACTIVITIES
Describing Project Scope, Alternatives and feasibility Dividing the Project into manageable tasks (WBS) Estimating and creating a Resources Plan Developing a Preliminary Project Schedule Developing a Project Communication Plan Determining Project Standards and Procedures Identifying and Assessing Project Risks CREATING A PRELIMINARY BUDGET DEVELOPING A STATEMENT OF WORK Setting a Baseline Project Plan.

10 2.1 DESCRIBING PROJECT SCOPE, ALTERNATIVES AND FEASIBILITY
PURPOSE: Is to understand the content and complexity of the Project. 2.2 DIVIDING THE PROJECT INTO MANAGEABLE TASKS (WORK BREAKEDOWN STRUCTURE) Project must be divided into manageable tasks and then logically order them to ensure a smooth evolution between tasks. The definition of tasks and their sequences is referred as the Work Breakdown Structure (WBS). WBS is essential in Planning and executing the Project because it is the foundation for developing the Project Schedules (PERT / and GANNT chart) for identifying Milestones in the Scheduling and for managing Costs.

11 Work BreakedownStructure (WBS)

12 2.3 ESTIMATING RESOURCES AND CARRYING A RESOURCE PLAN
PURPOSE Is to estimate Resource Requirements for each project Activity and use this information to create a Project Plan. 2.4 DEVELOPUNG A PRELIMINARY SCHEDULE Using the information on Tasks and Resources availability to assign TIME ESTIMATES to each Activity in the WBS. TIME ESTIMATES will allows you to create Target Starting and Ending Dates for the Project. The Preliminary Schedule may be represented as a GANTT Chart or as a Network Diagram (i.e. PERT/CPM Chart.)

13 2.5 DEVELOPING A COMMUNICATION PLAN
PURPOSE Is to outline the communication procedures among Management, Project team members and the Customer. 2.6 DETERMINING PROJECT STANDARD AND PROCEDURES Specify how various Project Deliverables are produced and tested by you and your Project team. Setting Project Standards and Procedures for work acceptance is a way to assure the development of a high quality System.

14 2.7 IDENTIFYING AND ASSESSING RISK
PURPOSE Is to identify sources of Project Risk and to estimate the consequences of those Risks. Risk might arise from the use of new technology, availability of critical resources, team member inexperience with technology or business area etc. YOU SHOULD CONTINUALLY TRY TO IDENTIFY AND ASSESSS PROJECT RISK. 2.8 CREATING A PRELIMINARY BUDGET You need to create a Preliminary Project budget that outlines the Planned expenses and Revenues associated with the Project. The Preliminary Budget will be used for Project Justification.

15 2.9 DEVELOPING A STATEMENT OF WORK
Developed primarily for the Customer. It outlines work that will be done and clearly describes what the Project will deliver. It is useful since all parties have a clear understanding of the intended Project Size, Duration and outcomes. 2.10 SETTING A BASELINE PROJECT PLAN The Baseline Project Plan provides an estimate of the Project’s tasks and Resource requirements and is used to guide the next project phase Execution. As new information is acquired during Project Execution, the Baseline Plan will be continue to be updated.

16 3. EXECUTING THE PROJECT The third Phase in Project Management Process in which the Plans created in the prior Project Phases are put to action. If you develop a high quality Project Plan, it is much more likely that the Project will be successfully executed. KEY ACTIVITIES OF PROJECT EXECUTION EXECUTING BASELINE PROJECT PLAN MONITORING PROJECT PROGRESS AGAINST THE BASELINE PLAN MONITORING CHANGES TO BASELINE PLAN MAINTAINING THE PROJECT WORKBOOK COMMUNOCATING THE PROJECT STATUS.

17 4. CLOSING DOWN THE PROJECT
The final Phase of Project Management process which focuses on bringing a Project to an end. Closedown is a very important activity since a Project is not complete until it is closed. Projects can conclude with a natural or unnatural termination. Natural termination occurs when the requirements of the Project have been met and thus the Project completed and is a success. An Unnatural termination occurs when the Project is stopped before natural completion.

18 4. CLOSING DOWN THE PROJECT
PROJECT CLOSEDOWN ACTIVITIES Closing Down the Project Conducting Post-project Review Closing the Customer Contract

19 REPRESENTING & SCHEDULING PROJECT PLANS
The Most commonly used methods are :- GANTT CHART NETWORK DIAGRAMS (PERT/ CPM)

20 GANTT CHART A graphical representation of a Project that shows each task as a horizontal bar whose length is proportional to its time for completion. A GANTT Chart is a horizontal bar chart that illustrates a Project schedule. In the GANTT Chart Time is displayed on the horizontal axis and the Tasks/ Activities are arranged vertically from top to bottom, in order of their start dates. A detailed GANTT Chart for a large project might be quite complex and hard to understand. To simplify the chart Project manager can combine related activities into one Task.

21 GANTT CHART A graphical representation of a Project that shows each task as a horizontal bar whose length s proportional to its time for completion. GANTT CHART do not show how tasks must be ordered (precedence) but simply show when a task should begin and should end GANTT Chart is often more useful to for depicting relatively simple projects or sub projects of a large project, the activities of a single worker, or for monitoring the progress of activities compared to scheduled completion dates..

22 GANTT CHART

23 NETWORK DIAGRAM Is a graphical depiction of Project tasks and their inter- relationships. The distinguishing feature of a Network Diagram is that the ordering of Tasks is shown by connecting with its predecessor and successor tasks. Network Diagramming is a Critical Path Scheduling Technique used for controlling resources. CRITICAL PATH SCHEDULING A scheduling technique whose order and duration of a sequence of task activities directly affect the Completion Date of a Project

24 NETWORK DIAGRAM You would use a Network Diagram when Project Tasks:-
Are well defined and have clear beginning and end point Can be worked on independently of other tasks Are ordered Serve the purpose of project

25 4/25/2018

26 Reference List Project Life Cycles(Pinto 33)
Pinto, Jeffrey K. Project Management: Achieving Competitive Advantage, Global Edition, 4th Edition. Pearson Higher Education (UK), VitalBook file.

27 Suggested Reading & Research
Read Chapter 1 of Project Management by Pinto (e-text, pp33-pp36) Research on Project Life Cycle Stages and activities.


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